Abstract

We report the case of a 55-year-old woman presenting stage-3-4 dyspnea over the last 5years with no other clinical symptoms. Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) was evidenced by echocardiography. However, there was no argument for chronic thromboembolic disease during pulmonary angiography. The pulmonary scintigraphy showed homogeneous ventilation on both lung fields, with multiple bilateral segmental and subsegmental perfusion defects, however. These perfusion abnormalities with a normal pulmonary angiography led to the diagnosis of pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD) taking into account the clinical context, imaging findings, and laboratory and functional assessments. PVOD is a clinicopathological entity characterized by the occlusion or narrowing of the pulmonary veins and venules by fibrous tissue, leading to clinical manifestations that are, in many ways similar to PAH. PVOD remains poorly understood and it is difficult to diagnose and treat. However, PVOD needs to be known by clinicians and considered in the differential diagnosis of PAH.

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